Prototyping Civic Digital Trusts

Prototyping a civic digital trust has been identified as an opportunity to explore how a potential smart city civic data trust could operationalized in Toronto. A limited and narrowly defined civic digital trust prototype offers a unique opportunity to dramatically reduce the potential risks, costs and time required to extract the key learnings that are critical for advancing the exploration of a civic digital trust in Toronto. Workshop participants developed the following considerations.

Selection Criteria

Key criteria for selecting a use case for prototyping should include the following considerations:

Have a strong use case that drives the prototyping exercise (North Star use case)

Generate compelling public value and wide public interest

Connect both public and private sector datasets

Look at using high quality data-sets to manage costs

Use less sensitive datasets to reduce the risk of experimentation

Participants recommended developing a use case that explores data that is collected in the following four different scenarios:

Data collected from cell phones (which was identified as a unique enough data source that it needed to be considered separately)

Possible Prototypes

Deciding what use case should be tested first was a challenging exercise to consider. Some ideas to consider were:

Understand critical issues that underly the dataset needed for the use case before selecting it

Limit the number of datasets used but consider going deep into the planned and unplanned uses of the data

Develop a use case that can leverage existing projects that are capturing and analyzing high quality data sets. An example used in the mobility sector was around the use of data that was being collected for the King Street pilot.

Resourcing

Key resources that would be needed to develop a prototype include:

Key stakeholders with a well defined use case that can be unlocked through existing datasets